Movatterモバイル変換


[0]ホーム

URL:


PhilPapersPhilPeoplePhilArchivePhilEventsPhilJobs
Order:

1 filter applied
  1.  66
    Commodifying bodies.Nancy Scheper-Hughes &Loïc J. D. Wacquant (eds.) -2002 - Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications.
    Increasingly the body is a possession that does not belong to us. It is bought and sold, bartered and stolen, marketed wholesale or in parts. The professions - especially reproductive medicine, transplant surgery, and bioethics but also journalism and other cultural specialists - have been pliant partners in this accelerating commodification of live and dead human organisms. Under the guise of healing or research, they have contributed to a new 'ethic of parts' for which the divisible body is severed from (...) the self, torn from the social fabric, and thrust into commercial transactions -- as organs, secretions, reproductive capacities, and tissues -- responding to the dictates of an incipiently global marketplace. Breaking with established approaches which prioritize the body as 'text', the chapters in this book examine not only images of the body-turned-merchandise but actually existing organisms considered at once as material entities, semi-magical tokens, symbolic vectors and founts of lived experience. The topics covered range from the cultural disposal and media treatment of corpses, the biopolitics of cells, sperm banks and eugenics, to the international trafficking of kidneys, the development of 'transplant tourism', to the idioms of corporeal exploitation among prizefighters as a limiting case of fleshly commodity. This insightful and arresting volume combines perspectives from anthropology, law, medicine, and sociology to offer compelling analyses of the concrete ways in which the body is made into a commodity and how its marketization in turn remakes social relations and cultural meanings. (shrink)
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   22 citations  
  2.  49
    Bodies for sale-whole or in parts.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2002 - In Nancy Scheper-Hughes & Loïc J. D. Wacquant,Commodifying bodies. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: Sage Publications. pp. 1--8.
  3.  140
    Commodity Fetishism in Organs Trafficking.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2001 -Body and Society 7 (2-3):31-62.
    This article draws on a five-year, multi-sited transnational research project on the global traffic in human organs, tissues, and body parts from the living as well as from the dead as a misrecognized form of human sacrifice. Capitalist expansion and the spread of advanced medical and surgical techniques and developments in biotechnology have incited new tastes and traffic in the skin, bones, blood, organs, tissues, marrow and reproductive and genetic marginalized other. Examples drawn from recent ethnographic research in Israel, the (...) Palestinian Authority and Turkey serve to cast light on the dark side of organs harvesting and transplantation. The article focuses on the dangers of the `fetishized kidney' for both sellers and buyers, for whom this new commodity has become an organ of opportunity and an organ of last resort. The bodily sacrifice is disguised as a donation, rendered invisible by its anonymity, and hidden under the medical rhetoric of `life saving' and `gift giving'. It suggests that the ultimate fetish as recognized long ago by Ivan Illich is the idea of `life' as object of manipulation. (shrink)
    Direct download(2 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   16 citations  
  4. Rotten trade : millennial capitalism, human values and global justice in organs trafficking.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2009 - In Mark Goodale,Human rights: an anthropological reader. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   8 citations  
  5.  60
    Culture, scarcity, and maternal thinking: maternal detachment and infant survival in a Brazilian shantytown.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -1985 -Ethos: Journal of the Society for Psychological Anthropology 13 (4):291-317.
  6.  20
    Introduction: Medical Migrations.Nancy Scheper-Hughes &Elizabeth F. S. Roberts -2011 -Body and Society 17 (2-3):1-30.
    Moshe Tati, a sanitation worker in Jerusalem, was among the first of more than a thousand mortally sick Israelis who signed up for illicit and clandestine ‘transplant tour’ packages that included: travel to an undisclosed foreign and exotic setting; five-star hotel accommodation; surgery in a private hospital unit; a ‘fresh’ kidney purchased from a perfect stranger trafficked from a third country. Although Tati’s holiday turned into a nightmare and he had to be emergency air-lifted from a rented transplant unit in (...) a private hospital in Adana, Turkey back to Israel, Moshe became a poster-boy of transplant tourism for the next decade. João Cavalcanti was among the first of 38 residents of the slums of Recife recruited by retired military Captain Ivan da Silva and his sidekick Captain Gadddy Tauber to travel to Durban, South Africa to provide a spare kidney to an Israeli transplant tourist in Durban. This article examines the logics and practices through which kidney buyers and kidney sellers, organs brokers, surgeons and their accessories convince themselves that they are engaged in an illegal but still mutually beneficial ‘medical-recreational’ adventure, an ‘extreme medical sport’ of sorts. While life, health and survival motivate ‘transplant tourism’, a euphemism for human trafficking in spare body parts, the freedom to roam, mobility, is an essential feature of transplant tours for kidney buyers and kidney sellers. (shrink)
    No categories
    Direct download  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark   5 citations  
  7.  26
    (1 other version)Why We Should Not Pay for Human Organs.Francis L. Delmonico &Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2002 -The National Catholic Bioethics Quarterly 2 (3):381-389.
  8. Min (d) ing the body: On the trail of organ stealing rumors.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2002 - In Jeremy MacClancy,Exotic no more: anthropology on the front lines. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. pp. 33--63.
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  9.  26
    Introduction: A Caveat on Caveats.Jeffrey M. Perl,Christian B. N. Gade,Rane Willerslev,Lotte Meinert,Beverly Haviland,Nancy Scheper-Hughes,Daniel Grausam,Daniel McKay &Michiko Urita -2015 -Common Knowledge 21 (3):399-405.
    In this introduction to part 4 of the Common Knowledge symposium “Peace by Other Means,” the journal's editor assesses the argument made by Peace, the spokesperson of Erasmus in his Querela Pacis, that the desire to impute and avenge wrongs against oneself is insatiable and at the root of both individual and social enmities. He notes that, in a symposium about how to resolve and prevent enmity, most contributions have to date expressed caveats about how justice and truth must take (...) precedence over peace, how recovery from ill treatment may be impossible, how quietism is not a moral option, and how realism demands a national policy and a personal strategy of, at best, contingent forgiveness. He concedes that the attitudes of those opposed to quietism are healthy but suggests that there may be goods worthier than health of human devotion. This essay concludes that the main differences between what it terms “judgmental” and “irenic” regimes are disagreements over anthropology and metaphysics. The presumptions that truths are objectively knowable and that human beings are moral and rational agents characterize judgmental regimes; irenic regimes are characterized by disillusionment with those assumptions. (shrink)
    No categories
    Direct download(4 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  10. Face to Face with Abidoral.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2010 - In Leonidas Cheliotis,Roots, rites and sites of resistance: the banality of good. New York: Palgrave-Macmillan. pp. 151.
    No categories
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
  11.  23
    Wounded.Nancy Scheper-Hughes -2015 -Common Knowledge 21 (3):437-450.
    As a contribution to the Common Knowledge symposium on the resolution and prevention of enmity, this article concerns how enmity deforms social as well as individual personality. Societies need time and must exert significant effort, much of it intellectual, in order to recuperate: they need to recover both from harms that others have intentionally done them and from having done harm to others. Social recuperation is difficult because the tactics and standards of wartime seep into civilian and personal domestic life. (...) In contemporary American life, the proliferation of armed and gated communities, the institution of the house gun, the general acquiescence in stop-and-frisk encounters, and the incarceration in huge numbers of gang members and small-time drug dealers are examples. An inverse relationship of wartime and peacetime abuses is also apparent: behaviors associated with civilian private life are deployed during wartime as techniques with which to humiliate and torture enemy combatants. This type of mimetic effect reaches the limit of complexity when wartime abuses that mirror domestic abuses are then mirrored in their further application to domestic settings that themselves have become militarized. (shrink)
    No categories
    Direct download(3 more)  
     
    Export citation  
     
    Bookmark  
Export
Limit to items.
Filters





Configure languageshere.Sign in to use this feature.

Viewing options


Open Category Editor
Off-campus access
Using PhilPapers from home?

Create an account to enable off-campus access through your institution's proxy server or OpenAthens.


[8]ページ先頭

©2009-2025 Movatter.jp